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  1. History of Louisiana. Shreve Town was originally contained within the boundaries of a section of land sold to the company by the indigenous Caddo Indians in the year of 1835, during the period of Indian Removal. [1] In 1838, Caddo Parish was created from the large Natchitoches Parish and Shreve Town was designated as the parish seat.

  2. Shreveport ( / ˈʃriːvpɔːrt / SHREEV-port) is a city in the U.S. state of Louisiana. It is the third-most populous city in Louisiana after New Orleans and Baton Rouge. The bulk of Shreveport is in Caddo Parish, of which it is the parish seat. [4] It extends along the west bank of the Red River into neighboring Bossier Parish.

  3. Confederate General surrenders the Trans-Mississippi department to the Union troops arriving in Shreveport. June 2 General Kirby Smith signed the surrender document, officially surrendering the Western portion of the Confederacy June 25 Louisiana rejoins the Union. Reconstruction is ended. 1865 1868

  4. Feb 4, 2009 · The Red River Campaign, which included the largest combined army-navy operation of the war, was the last decisive Confederate victory of the war. The target of the campaign was Shreveport, the capital of Confederate Louisiana and the headquarters for the Army of the Trans-Mississippi. The town was the nexus of a small military-industrial ...

    • Was Shreveport a Confederate city?1
    • Was Shreveport a Confederate city?2
    • Was Shreveport a Confederate city?3
    • Was Shreveport a Confederate city?4
    • Was Shreveport a Confederate city?5
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  6. By 1860, Shreveport had a free population of 2,200 and 1,300 slaves within the city limits. During the American Civil War, Shreveport was a Confederate stronghold and the headquarters of the Trans-Mississippi Department of the Confederate States Army.

  7. A prerequisite to such an offensive was the capture of the city of Shreveport, capital of Confederate Louisiana and the hub of a vital military and manufacturing cluster that included arms production and port facilities on the Red River, a shallow and sometimes treacherous stream that meandered more than 1,300 miles from headwaters in the Texas ...

  8. Shreveport remained a Confederate stronghold for the duration of the war and even served as the capital of the Confederacy for a brief period. Jewish residents of Shreveport aided the Confederacy with more than mere rhetoric; 77 Jewish men from the city fought for the Confederate Army during the war.

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